It's
thanksgiving day, 2009. I am thankful for my life, the work I'm doing,
the ability to speak the message which I have to share.
Today is supposed to be a moment of being thankful, grateful for the
bounty of our lives. Of course gratefulness is a practice for every
day, not just one day a year, but it's helpful to have the reminder of
gratefulness due to the day for giving thanks. But, wait, is this what
most of thanksgiving celebrations are about? Is the orgy of football
games a practice of gratefulness? Is the orgy of eating a practice of
gratefulness? Well, okay, maybe that one is, or at least can be. Is
the orgy of shopping on the day after, commonly called Black Friday, a
practice of gratefulness?
Black Friday is supposed to be the official start of the Christmas
Season. It's commonly the day a guy dressed as Santa lights the
Christmas Tree, and there is the Thanksgiving Day Parades led by guys
dressed as Santa. Sure it makes sense to have a ceremony to launch a
period of other ceremonies leading up to a major celebration. But, just
what part of Christs story does Santa come from? Just what part of
Christs story do Christmas trees come from? And most importantly just
what part of Christs story implies we should shop til we drop and engage
in an orgy of consumption?
Buy Nothing Day is organized by Adbusters. It is observed on the day
following Thanksgiving, the day commonly known as Black Friday, and the
idea is to engage in activities other than shopping. Part of the
message of Buy Nothing Day is the above points and others I'll be making
below. I believe the purpose Adbusters has in mind behind Buy Nothing
Day is to interrupt the practice of overconsumption tied into Black
Friday and the way Christmas is currently practiced in the prevailing
paradigm.
There are a lot of videos on youtube about Buy Nothing Day, just search for them. Some are linked below.
Buy Nothing Day is important to me for several reasons. One is the
subversion or destruction of the real meaning of Christmas discussed
above. Christmas is supposed to be a celebration of the birth of a
great spiritual teacher, and it is supposed to be symbolic of the
awakening within us of attributes taught by that spiritual teacher
(Jesus Christ). But think about how Christmas is celebrated and the
common symbols. Frosty the Snowman, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer,
Santa Claus, the Nutcracker, Good King Wenceslaus, the Christmas tree,
candy canes, elves, the orgy of presents bought and gifted, and on and
on. None of this has a single thing to do with celebrating the birth of
this great spiritual teacher. Not a thing.
Still, those things are the focus of most activities related to
Christmas. And it is Black Friday which starts off the orgy of buying.
Another reason BND is important has to do with the ecological impact
of the economics of this orgy of buying. Our Capitalistic system is
driven by Consumerism. You hear it pretty plainly in the news if you
care to listen. They talk about "Consumer Confidence" which is
gobbledygook for measuring how much people are spending. The more we
spend the more confident we are, supposedly. The news during Christmas
season is full of analysis over how much we spend, and it is Christmas
spending that keeps the economy going.
What this means is that rates of consumption drive rates of economic
activity which drive rates of production which drives rates of mining
resources to build this stuff. Often it's stuff that isn't truly
needed, and in any case is produced for a celebration that's a
subversion of a very real tradition our society has had with over 1000
years of history behind it. That very real tradition of Christmas has
been destroyed and replaced by a fake mockery pretending to be the real
tradition, but instead is a total and complete sham.
This sham is harming our traditions and harming our environment.
TechnoSanity #35: Buy Nothing Day
References: What did you do for Buy Nothing Day?
References: The battle for christmas
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